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Early-acting inbreeding depression and reproductive success in the highbush blueberry,Vaccinium corymbosum L.
Authors:S L Krebs  J F Hancock
Institution:(1) Department of Horticulture, Michigan State University, 48824 East Lansing, MI, USA
Abstract:Summary Tetraploid Vaccinium corymbosum genotypes exhibit wide variability in seed set following self- and cross-pollinations. In this paper, a post-zygotic mechanism (seed abortion) under polygenic control is proposed as the basis for fertility differences in this species. A pollen chase experiment indicated that self-pollen tubes fertilize ovules, but are also lsquooutcompetedrsquo by foreign male gametes in pollen mixtures. Matings among cultivars derived from a pedigree showed a linear decrease in seed number per fruit, and increase in seed abortion, with increasing relatedness among parents. Selfed (S1) progeny from self-fertile parents were largely self-sterile. At zygotic levels of inbreeding of F>0.3 there was little or no fertility, suggesting that an inbreeding threshold regulates reproductive success in V. corymbosum matings. Individuals below the threshold are facultative selfers, while those above it are obligate outcrossers. Inbreeding also caused a decrease in pollen viability, and reduced female fertility more rapidly than male fertility. These phenomena are discussed in terms of two models of genetic load: (1) mutational load — homozygosity for recessive embryolethal or sub-lethal mutations and (2) segregational load — loss of allelic interactions essential for embryonic vigor. Self-infertility in highbush blueberries is placed in the context of lsquolate-actingrsquo self-incompatibility versus lsquoearly-actingrsquo inbreeding depression in angiosperms.
Keywords:Mating systems  Self-incompatibility  Genetic load
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